as `packed'.
The C standard leaves the alignment of individual members of a C
struct upto the implementation, so pedantically speaking portable
code cannot assume that the layout of a `struct ar_hdr' in memory
will match its layout in a file. Using a __packed attribute
declaration forces file and memory layouts for this structure to
match.
Submitted by: ru
- Reword some sentences
- Use .Cm for arguments
- s/CAVEAT/CAVEATS/
Based on PR: docs/78174
Submitted by: Jeremy Chadwick <freebsd@jdc.parodius.com>
Reviewed by: brueffer
Approved by: emax (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
* Use public API, don't access struct archive directly. (People should be able to copy these into their applications as a template for custom I/O callbacks.)
* Set "skip" only for regular files. ("skip" allows the low-level library to catch attempts to add an archive to itself or extract over itself.)
* Simplify the write_open functions by just calling stat() at the beginning. Somehow, these functions had acquired some complex logic that tried to avoid the stat() call but never succeeded.
MFC after: 10 days
file. This doesn't happen in normal use, because the file I/O and
decompression layers only pass through smaller blocks. It can happen
with custom read functions that block I/O in larger blocks.
written to the socket). The rewrite in revision 1.240 got confused by the
FreeBSD 4.x bug compatibility code.
For some reason lighttpd, that was used for testing the new sendfile code,
was not affected by the problem but apache and others using headers/trailers
in the sendfile call received incorrect sbytes values after return from non-
blocking sockets. This then lead to restarts with wrong offsets and thus
mixed up file contents when the socket was writeable again. All programs
not using headers/trailers, like ftpd, were not affected by the bug.
Reported by: Pawel Worach <pawel.worach-at-gmail.com>
Tested by: Pawel Worach <pawel.worach-at-gmail.com>
Using either one of the two would result in an empty protos[]
array, and no sockets were actually listed:
% sockstat -4
USER COMMAND PID FD PROTO LOCAL ADDRESS FOREIGN ADDRESS
% sockstat -6
USER COMMAND PID FD PROTO LOCAL ADDRESS FOREIGN ADDRESS
%
Fix this bug by tweaking appropriately the logic of handling opt_4,
opt_6, opt_u and protos_defined.
Submitted by: des
Pointy hat: keramida
want to confuse people at the very beginning.
Sync TOC/paragraph numbers in the text.
Requested by: Benedikt Stockebrand during his talk at EuroBSDCon 2006
Reviewed by: gnn
The eui64.[ch] and ipv6cp.[ch] were taken from ppp-2.3.11.
However, our stock pppd(8) doesn't provide option_t nor some
utility functions. So, I made some hacks to adjust to our
stock pppd(8).
The sys_bsd.c part was taken from NetBSD with some
modifications to adjust to our stock pppd(8).
MFC after: 1 week
not being aquired. This meant that when we cleanup
the outbound we may have one in transit to be
added with the old sequence number. This is bad
since then we loose a message :(
Also the report_outbound needed to have the right
lock when its called which it did not.. I added
the lock with of course a flag since we want to
have the lock before we call it in the restart
case.
This also fixed the FIX ME case where, in the cookie
collision case, we mark for retransmit any that
were bundled with the cookie that was dropped.
This also means changes to the output routine
so we can assure getting the COOKIE-ACK sent
BEFORE we retransmit the Data.
Approved by: gnn
behavior of sockstat(1) will still be to show "udp", "tcp" and
"divert" protocols, but we can now provide a (comma-separated)
list of protocols, as in:
% sockstat -P tcp
to list only TCP sockets, or we can filter more than one protocol
by separating the protocol names with a comma:
% sockstat -P tcp,udp
Protocol names are parsed with getprotobyname(3), so any protocol
whose name is listed in `/etc/protocols' should work fine.
Submitted by: Josh Carroll <josh.carroll@psualum.com>
Approved by: des